the distinction is between the appearance, and what is said about the appearance. — tim wood
Emptiness is [simply] a mode of perception, a way of looking at experience. It adds nothing to and takes nothing away from the raw data of physical and mental events. You look at events in the mind and the senses with no thought of whether there's anything lying behind them.
This mode is called 'emptiness' because it's empty of the presuppositions we usually add to experience to make sense of it: the stories and world-views we fashion to explain who we are and the world we live in. Although these stories and views have their uses, the Buddha found that some of the more abstract questions they raise — of our true identity and the reality of the world outside — pull attention away from a direct experience of how events influence one another in the immediate present. Thus they get in the way when we try to understand and solve the problem of suffering.
The problem occurs as this appearance necessitates dogma and in these respects the pyrhonnists contradict themselves. — eodnhoj7
I don't qualify as an apologist for Pyrrhonism; I only have some notions about it got from one book. But I am pretty sure that contradiction is actually nothing to them. How could it be? How would an appearance (again, broadly inclusive) be a contradiction. Observe I did not say grounds for a contradiction; that would be a different application. But a contradiction in itself? Above in the OP is the example of "the dancing trees." A contradiction only if the respective appearances are confused one for the other.So if the practice of pyrhonism is rooted in contradiction, — eodnhoj7
Who said this? They didn't. You're confusing things. A contradiction arises in the confrontation of two (or more) thing otherwise related. There's no contradiction in appearances. This appears, that appears and that's it. Hard to get your head around, but worth the effort.and appearances are rooted in contradiction — eodnhoj7
The negation of a positive, in this case dogma, necessitates a positive to be negated where negation is strictly a means of relative gradation hence appearance as dogma is rooted in an idolization of relativism if left unobserved. — eodnhoj7
what they may have said and what they appear to have said is relative to the observer as the observer still appears under a mantle of selfhood. — eodnhoj7
I do not think "truth" is a meaningful criteria for evaluating Pyrrhonism, except perhaps trivially. At the very first, you would have to define "truth" somehow, and that's it own problem.If these are "my axioms" as I perceive them, and the pyrhonnist perspective is true, — eodnhoj7
The problem of a strict suspension of judgement is it still necessitates a form of judgement as a process of negation in necessititated. This negatation requires a positive act of focus, for the most part, where a thesis is supplied to act as a negative. — eodnhoj7
This is a debate... — eodnhoj7
I will summate may point in shorter terms:
The pyrrhonist premise of appearance necessitates forms of negation. The forms of negation give form and function to a stable and structured mind. As positively forming a sound mind, the negative qualities of pyrhonnist philosophy has a dual positive structure and exists as dogma.
Who said that? I only read that they're opposed to dogmatism.The pyrhonist school claims there can be no dogma. — eodnhoj7
Who said that? I only read that Pyrrhonists choose to place their beliefs in appearances, as opposed to believing in things that are non-evident.Only appearance is truth. — eodnhoj7
incoherent, irrelevant.Appearance becomes is own constant law of change. — eodnhoj7
Just incoherent.Constant change is a limit and is a structure as this is One Law. — eodnhoj7
Near as I can tell, it's neither right nor wrong; it is a system for mediating perceptions and sensations to "see" them as they are.Pyrhonism is not wrong — eodnhoj7
It's contradictory when rational?It is only contradictory when viewed solely as self existing and rationally maintained by its own form and function — eodnhoj7
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